‘Dare to be great’: words to remember from convocation

Incoming freshmen hear what it means to be part of the Trojan Family. (USC Photo/Gus Ruelas)

Thousands of misty-eyed parents looked on, craning their necks to etch a treasured memory or snap a timeless keepsake as the incoming class of 2018 marched behind school banners into Alumni Park, black gowns draped over board shorts and sundresses.

If convocation — a major milestone of Welcome Week — feels like the mirror image of commencement, it’s no coincidence. This is the moment when freshmen and transfer students are formally inducted into the Trojan Family.

Under dappled sunlight and a soft breeze, an unmistakable air of tradition and ritual suffused the Aug. 21 ceremony. As the USC Trojan Marching Band played “Conquest,” velvet-robed scholars made their way from Bovard Hall to the stage erected in front of Doheny Memorial Library.

“Today, the president, the provost — our chief academic officer — and the deans of the schools will officially induct you into USC’s community of scholars,“ declared Ainsley Carry, vice provost for student affairs.

A sea of enthusiastic faces

Frosh flash USC’s victory sign. (USC Photo/Gus Ruelas)

President C. L. Max Nikias welcomed the new Trojans into the family.

“USC is a place today where 53,000 applicants competed for 2,700 spots in the freshman class,” he told the sea of enthusiastic faces. “We searched far and wide to find you. … So if you feel very special to be here today, I’ve got news for you — it’s because you are!”

Nikias challenged the incoming class to redefine literacy as a fluency of the powers of imagination, the arts and literature, world cultures, digital media and most importantly, of ethics. The president concluded his uplifting speech with instructions on “a simple gesture” that all Trojans know.

“No matter where you are in the world,” he said, “whether you are walking along the streets of Los Angeles or in the heart of New York City or Mumbai or London or Shanghai or the island of Santorini, if you recognize another Trojan, you flash the victory sign and say: ‘Fight on!’”

The crowd exuberantly complied.

Undergraduate Student Body President Andrew Menard added his own words of advice.

“Dare to be great,” the senior business major told the newcomers. “USC is not an average school. It’s an exceptional institution. … USC will give you opportunities that most college students will never get. So study harder than anyone, ask questions that others aren’t asking and take risks.”

Jacob Soll, professor of history and accounting, extended his own welcome on behalf of the faculty; then one by one, the deans of each school rose to formally present the student inductees to the president and provost, bestowing upon them “the rights, responsibilities and privileges” of a Trojan.

Musical memories

Musical interludes brightened the program. A solo performance of composer Mark Summer’s “Julie-O” showcased the talent of freshman cellist Annie Jacobs-Perkins of Pennsylvania. By the time tenor Blake Howard, a graduate student at the USC Thornton School of Music, sang “Alma Mater,” parental hearts surely swelled.

As the event ended, families regrouped, bracing for the tearful last goodbyes. Alice Stafford was already mentally shopping for the care package she would send her son, Matthew, a business major, when she and husband Doug reached home in Scottsdale, Arizona.

Patty and Jonathan Shapiro of Encinitas, California, trained their cell cams on their smiling son, Benjamin, posed against the USC Thornton banner. Asked if he felt like a Trojan now, the classical saxophone major said he’d been feeling that way since orientation. Asked if he feels ready for his freshman year, he responded with good-natured impatience.

“Actually,” Shapiro said, “I can’t wait for Welcome Week to be over, so I can start in on my music.”